No, I try to treat that machine like a quarantine zone, I have a two PC setup and that's part of the reason for it. So basically I don't log into online accounts on that one (except relatively unimportant accounts for convenience, like Steam), and I don't do important stuff on it
Any details you could share about how you obtained and processed the data? It seems like there's a lot of interesting things that could be done with this but I'm not sure where the best place to start would be
I wouldn't say unrelated, but anyway what's the broad term for what you are doing when you are being concerned with how bytes are stored then? Whatever that is, there's a generation of coders already who aren't doing so much of it
So are they loading every exam in its entirety into the same context window and doing the whole thing with a single prompt? Or letting the LLM take arbitrary actions instead of only returning a value? It seems like they would have had to make some pretty bad decisions for this to be possible, beyond maybe just adjusting the one grade. I wonder what the prompt jailbreak equivalents of sql injection would actually look like
Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances.
Notably not limited in the text to being about only the freedom of speech of citizens; this is blatantly illegal.
These explanations make sense to me, but they seem to conflict a little with what's being said in the post, where it's implied that game journalism sites get a decent amount of traffic but it isn't worth as much because media business models as a whole are collapsing somehow:
It doesn’t matter how many millions, or even tens of millions of people are reading a website if the means of financially supporting that writing are evaporating.
The free internet as we’ve known it for the last 20 years is collapsing as the ad market evaporates and corporate media ownership becomes increasingly unhinged in response. As belts tighten and profits dwindle across all media–not just video games–that rising tide could begin claiming more and more sites that even ten years ago would have seemed immortal.
Why is this happening? The post alludes to Google and Meta hogging all the ads somehow, but why would advertising on things resembling traditional media now be worthless? Everyone started using adblockers or is there something else too?
This is why you try to filter out signifiers of credibility that are just word choices. What's the actual idea being expressed, and what's backing it up, that is what to pay attention to.
"A lot of us worked tirelessly to make even a fraction of a living doing something we genuinely love, and we're afraid of that being taken away from us, so it's looking like we have no other choice but to look for mundane work and give up our passion".
Sounds like the shitty bargain of game dev is getting worse. It's sad to think about all the great things people would make and accomplish if they weren't trapped in wage slavery.
Well, this is what the relevant part of the video says:
USAGM disbursed $7.5M to these entities, in "what seemed to be an effort to delay the hearing or woo the judge". Regardless, the latter has sided against USAGM, and just a few days ago, the agency has decided to back off and release the funds for the 2025 fiscal year.
There's always the higher tire particulate contribution to the microplastics problem, which is supposedly much worse depending on vehicle weight, which is also worse because electric vehicle batteries are heavy
So I guess funds were cut, but then the courts ruled the president doesn't have authority to do this himself since the funds were allocated by congress, and so as of now they have been restored, although congress needs to approve them every year and there's concern they might not do so for next year.
I eat a lot of rice so that sucks